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Study reveals connection between vaccines and increased chronic illness

Study reveals connection between vaccines and increased chronic illness

Study Reveals Health Risks in Vaccinated Children

A study by the Henry Ford Health System, conducted from 2000 to 2006, analyzed the medical records of over 18,000 children, with 16,000 having received vaccinations.

The findings aimed to assure parents about the safety of the CDC’s vaccine schedule. However, the research indicated that vaccinated children had a higher likelihood of developing asthma—4.29 times more—along with a 3.03 times increased risk for autoimmune diseases and a 5.53 times higher chance of neurodevelopmental disorders, as explained by Aaron Siri from Siri & Glimstad LLP during a recent hearing.

“These results are statistically significant and concerning,” he remarked, suggesting that the immune system might be affected by the vaccines.

He further added, “Over ten years, 17% of unvaccinated children experienced chronic health issues, compared to 57% among vaccinated children, many of whom faced multiple chronic conditions.”

BlazeTV host Sarah Gonzalez expressed astonishment at these findings, questioning the recurring narrative surrounding vaccines. “We often hear the same leftist story repeated,” she stated, bringing attention to the ongoing debate.

The Guardian labeled the study as perpetuating “the same myth,” while a publication by Stat10 criticized it as “fundamentally flawed.”

Siri acknowledged that these critiques often lack substantive engagement with the study’s data. “When discussing vaccines, emotional responses often arise… Name-calling is common, rather than focusing on the evidence,” he commented.

Additionally, Del Bigtree, the CEO of Informed Consent Action Network, echoed these concerns, highlighting the absence of randomized controlled trials verifying vaccine safety in comparison to saline injections. “We’ve yet to establish safety,” he posited, which raises significant questions about the vaccines themselves.

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